Ovechkin lifts Capitals to win over Rangers

Jan 4, 2009 - 5:52 AM

By Tim Hipps
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

WASHINGTON (Ticker) -- Alex Ovechkin's shorthanded goal late in
the second period snapped a tie and lifted the Washington
Capitals to a 2-1 triumph Saturday over the New York Rangers,
extending their winning streak to a season-high six games and
giving them their best 40-game start in franchise history.

The Capitals had a reminder of the milestone etched on a grease
board in their locker room before the game.

"I think records are great to break when you get an opportunity
to break them," Washington coach Bruce Boudreau said. "No
matter if it's a team record or an individual record, we usually
put it on the board. Anytime you can break a record of 36
years, the players should be proud of themselves, so I'm happy
they did it."

Defenseman Mike Green also scored for Washington, which improved
to 26-11-3 overall and 17-1-1 on home ice.

"Especially in the third period, I thought we shut them down
real well and our guys worked real hard," Boudreau said. "And
that's playoff hockey - playing a really good team and you're
shutting them down, and you're doing it with all four lines. It
was a great effort. I thought the defense stood up and played
extremely well."

Skating down the right wing, Ovechkin deked two defenders near
the blue line before lifting a wrist shot over goaltender
Stephen Valiquette's right shoulder with 32 seconds left in the
middle period for a 2-1 lead.

"He had a number of those chances where he drags it and pauses,"
Valiquette said. "He's good at using the defensemen as a
screen. You really have to stay focused when he's on a 1-on-1
play. I know it's hard for everyone in the league to defend
him. We did the best we could."

"I just think Alex just finished missing a great chance, and
when he gets that look in his eyes that he was mad that he
missed a chance, you see him wanting to get it again," Boudreau
said. "And you shoot the puck as hard and as well as he does,
you keep shooting, things are going to go in."

Ovechkin downplayed the drama of the game-winner.

"It was the end of the shift, I just want to shoot the puck," he
said. "Like I said, it was kind of a lucky goal, and sometimes
you need to have luck. It was an important goal."

David Steckel notched the assist on Ovechkin's 27th goal of the
season, which tied him with Philadelphia's Jeff Carter for the
league lead.

The shorthanded tally was the fourth of Ovechkin's career and
his first since March 2, 2006 at Ottawa. The reigning Hart
Trophy winner has an eight-game goal-scoring streak at home and
has notched at least one point in 13 straight contests at the
Verizon Center.

The Capitals, who have won 11 of their last 12 games, surpassed
the mark of the 1985-86 team that went 25-11-4 through 40 games.
Washington's 26th victory of the season also is more than half
the franchise-record high of 50 set in 1985-86.

"It's a great start, and we want to be able to be up in that
rarified air," Boudreau said. "I don't know if we're there yet,
but we certainly want to be, and if they continue to play like
that - we don't have the schedule that we had in November and
December."

The Capitals have two days off before returning to the ice
against Philadelphia and two more before taking on Columbus.

"It gives a chance for our injured guys to come back, and I
thought we played well, so it's going to be tough to make
changes in the lineup," Boudreau said.

Washington also won its fifth in a row over New York, its
second-longest current winning streak against any team. The
Capitals posted their seventh straight victory over the Tampa
Bay Lightning on Thursday.

Petr Prucha scored for the Rangers, who have lost four of five
(1-3-1).

After New York's Ryan Callahan was whistled for tripping,
Green's power-play goal at 11:23 of the second period forged a
1-1 tie. Green skated down the right wing and stuffed home a
nice feed from Alexander Semin, who completed the pass from
below the end line.

Stationed in front of the net, Prucha redirected Brandon
Dubinsky's shot past goaltender Jose Theodore at 10:06 of the
second to give the Rangers a 1-0 lead.

Theodore, who stopped 21 shots, has won four straight starts.

"When he was tested, he made great saves," Boudreau said. "You
could tell, the very first shot of the game was a
semi-breakaway, and when he made that save, I said, 'He's on
tonight. He's focused.' And when he's good, he's real good.
That's why he was the MVP."

In a crisply played first period, both teams registered three
shots in the first eight minutes and seven apiece overall. The
Capitals outshot the Rangers, 18-8, in the second session.

After roaring to a 10-2-1 start, the Rangers have failed to win
back-to-back games since.

"You're always frustrated when you lose," New York coach Tom
Renney said. "It doesn't matter what it looks like, quite
honestly. It's tough when it's one of those things that's
preventable like a (shorthanded goal), which we've come to
recognize as a real problem for us. With that said, we competed
hard tonight."

"It's tough for us because we haven't done that well with our
power play this year and we've given up, I believe that's No. 12
(shorthanded goals) against," Valiquette added. "We have to
play harder."